I'd also recommend Linux Mint. In my experience, it's easy to setup and
use, even for someone who is used to Windows and new to Linux. The Mint
and Ubuntu support communities are very helpful (Mint is based on Ubuntu
so a lot of articles about Ubuntu can also apply). I ran it for years on
my work
On Thursday, March 15, 2018 at 6:06 PM, "Nelson Handcock"
> Seeing as the items were returned the very next day, you could also just
> delete the payment and unpost the invoice. Everything will then be as if
> the transaction never occurred.
That's not a correct way of doing it, imho. You did
On 03/16/2018 07:43 AM, David Reiser wrote:
On Mar 16, 2018, at 7:12 AM, Jay Ridgley wrote:
[snip]
After looking at the docs you provided, unless I am missing something more, it
appears that it is not the check definition that is wrong, at least as far as I
can
> On Mar 16, 2018, at 7:12 AM, Jay Ridgley wrote:
>
>
[snip]
> After looking at the docs you provided, unless I am missing something more,
> it appears that it is not the check definition that is wrong, at least as far
> as I can tell. See below..
>
> I have
> On Mar 16, 2018, at 9:10 AM, Jay Ridgley wrote:
>
> On 03/16/2018 07:43 AM, David Reiser wrote:
>>> On Mar 16, 2018, at 7:12 AM, Jay Ridgley wrote:
>>>
>>>
>> [snip]
>>> After looking at the docs you provided, unless I am missing something
Hello all, I have been using Intuit Mint for personal finance for sometime now.
Simple and not very detailed financial track. Just to know where the money is
going and recording date of events. Control about my personal billing become
crucial to stay out of trouble.
More or less Mint do it
here is my version of the Quicken wallet check definition. The principal change
is to set the y-translation offset to 0.0. I also added a couple things to the
stub and put the date and amount_number in better places for my low-end check
source.
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